21
SOL USII.4b: Immigration and the Growth of Cities Lisa Pennington Social Studies Instructional Specialist Portsmouth Public Schools

SOL USII.4b: Immigration and the Growth of Cities

  • Upload
    peyton

  • View
    77

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Lisa Pennington Social Studies Instructional Specialist Portsmouth Public Schools. SOL USII.4b: Immigration and the Growth of Cities. Vocabulary. Immigrant : a person who comes to another country to live and work. Oppressive : limiting the rights and freedoms of individuals. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

SOL USII.4b: Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Lisa PenningtonSocial Studies Instructional SpecialistPortsmouth Public Schools

Page 2: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Vocabulary

Immigrant: a person who comes to another country to live and work.

Oppressive: limiting the rights and freedoms of individuals.

Specialization: concentration on the manufacture of a particular product.

Division of labor: each person does one specific part of the whole process.

Page 3: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Essential Understandings

Population changes, growth of cities, and new inventions produced interaction and often conflict between different cultural groups.

Page 4: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Reasons for Increased Immigration

http://www.edu.pe.ca/southernkings/Pictures/plain1.jpg

• Hope for better opportunity• Religious freedom• Escape from oppressive governments• Adventure

Page 5: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Essential Understandings: Why cities developed

Population changes, growth of cities, and new inventions produced problems in urban areas.

Page 6: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Reasons why Cities Developed

Specialized industries including steel (Pittsburgh) and meat packing (Chicago).

Immigration from other countries.

Movement of Americans from rural to urban areas for job opportunities.

http://www.solpass.org/7ss/Images/steelmill%20pitts.jpg

Pittsburgh steel mill.

Page 7: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Cities with Specialized Industries Pittsburgh: steel Chicago: meat packing Boston: textiles New York City: clothing Cleveland: steel Gary: steel Philadelphia: ship building Western Pennsylvania: oil

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d2/GB-7925.jpg

http://www.marinelog.com/IMAGESMMVI/akerfloatout.jpg

Page 8: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Vocabulary

Political machine: a party organization headed by a single boss or group that commands enough votes to maintain political control of a city, county, or state.

Urbanization: growth in cities. Tenement: a building made up of many

apartments. Ghetto: a specific area in a city where an

ethnic group of similar culture, religion, and language lives.

Page 9: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Vocabulary

Industrial Revolution: change in production methods from human to machine power.

Entrepreneur: a person who takes a risk to establish a business.

Factors of production: labor, capital, natural resources, and a transportation system to move the finished product to markets.

Page 10: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Essential Knowledge

Rapid industrialization and urbanization led to overcrowded immigrant neighborhoods and tenements.

Challenges faced by cities include tenements and ghettos and political corruption (political machines).

http://edweb.sdsu.edu/ltca/Industrial/crowdedcity.jpg

Page 11: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Essential Knowledge

Inventions had both positive and negative effects on society.

Inventions contributed to great change and industrial growth.

Page 12: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Inventions

The development of the telegraph by Samuel Morse.

Lighting and mechanical uses of electricity by Thomas Edison (light bulb and phonograph).

http://blogs.abcnews.com/scienceandsociety/images/edison_light_bulb.jpg

http://www.wrvmuseum.org/morsecode/images/samuel_morse_telegraph.jpg

Page 13: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Inventions

Telephone service developed by Alexander Graham Bell.

Typewriter invented by Christopher Sholes.

http://www.solarnavigator.net/inventors/inventor_images/alexander_graham_bell_1876_speaking_into_telephone.jpg

http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/education/museum/images/pictures/artifacts3_big.jpg

Page 14: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Inventions

Atlantic cable developed by Cyrus Field.

George Eastman creates an affordable camera (Kodak).

http://kclibrary.lonestar.edu/images/kodak88l.gif

http://www.physics.gla.ac.uk/~macvicar/KelvinWWW/images/14%20Atlantic%20cable%201857%20GLAHM%20113450.jpg

Page 15: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Inventions

Cable cars invented by Andrew Hallidie.

Electric street railroad invented by Frank Sprague.

Invention of the gas powered automobile by the Duryea brothers.

http://www.cable-car-guy.com/images/tacoma_003.jpg

http://images.businessweek.com/ss/06/01/auto_bday/image/car_right.jpg

Page 16: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Inventions

George Pullman invented the sleeping car.

George Westinghouse invents the air brake.

Elijah McCoy invents a device that oils engines.

http://www.chicagohs.org/history/pullman/gif/01sleep.jpg

Page 17: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Essential Understandings

Population changes, growth of cities and new inventions produced reform situations that sought to provide services to crowded immigrant neighborhoods and remedy poverty.

Page 18: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Vocabulary

Settlement houses: community centers in urban areas established by social and religious workers to meet the needs of people in poor neighborhoods.

Hull House: a settlement house in Chicago established in 1889 by Jane Addams.

Tammany Hall: a political machine run by New York Democrats; Boss Tweed was the leader.

Page 19: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Efforts to solve immigration problems

Settlement houses, such as Hull House, founded by Jane Addams

Political machines that gained power by attending to the needs of new immigrants (e.g., jobs, housing)

http://www.ci.chi.il.us/Landmarks/images/landmarks/h/hull1a.gif

Page 20: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Discrimination against immigrants

Chinese and Irish immigrants, as well as other groups such as American Indians were discriminated against in several ways:

Dawes Act of 1887: Native Americans were ordered to become educated, to become citizens, and not to sell their land for 25 years.

Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882: banned immigration from China for 10 years.

Gentlemen’s Agreement of 1908: limited the number of Japanese immigrants to the United States.

Irish immigrants: suffered discrimination because of their Catholic religion.

Page 21: SOL USII.4b:  Immigration and the Growth of Cities

Think About It…

Why did immigration increase? Why did cities develop? What inventions created great

change and industrial growth in the United States?

What challenges faced Americans as a result of social and technological changes?